Discover – September 2019

(Greg DeLong) #1
62
DISCOVERMAGAZINE.COM

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BY BRIDGET ALEX


On a hot


day, an


average Joe


can sweat


12 liters;


maximum


rates for


humans


are over


four times


that of


chimps.


Today most scholars lean the other way.


They contend fur loss was not for sex, but


survival — specifically, survival of the


sweatiest. Reduced body hair enhanced


the cooling capacity of sweat, a crucial


adaptation in our ancestors’ hot, savanna-


like environments.


“Humans can dump heat ... whereas


other mammals, when you chase them,


overheat,” says Harvard University evolu-


tionary biologist Daniel Lieberman.


Homo sapiens also stand out as the


most perspiring primate. On a hot day, an


average Joe can sweat 12 liters; maximum


rates for humans are over four times that


of chimpanzees. The disparity is partially


explained by relative abundances of two


types of sweat glands: eccrine, the source


of watery sweat exuded through pores,


and apocrine, which secrete viscous liq-


uid from within hair roots. Chimp skin


comprises roughly two eccrine per one


apocrine, but ours is almost all eccrine.


“Humans have just gone wild with those


glands,” says Lieberman. Sweat cools the


body through evaporation, drawing heat


away from the skin. Thick fur impedes this


process; bare skin promotes it.


Researchers think fur loss coincided


with eccrine gland gain in our evolution-


ary story, as paired adaptations for better


sweating. But the details on when and how


are still patchy.


SWEATING: THE DETAILS


Lieberman has proposed two scenarios for


when and why fur was sacrificed for sweat.


Both assume the changes occurred after


hominins — the evolutionary branch of


apes leading to humans — began walk-


ing upright and traded tropical forests for


open, sunnier habitats, some 7 million


years ago. Fur usually shields mammals


from damaging solar radiation. But bipeds


could forgo this protection because only


their scalps are exposed to direct rays. And


this likely explains why hominins kept hair


on their heads.


The first scenario places fur loss within


a few million years of the origins of biped-


alism, when our ancestors were merely


3 to 4 feet tall, with chimpanzee-sized


brains. Since two legs are slower than four,


Getting Naked


Our human ancestors lost the primate pelt —


researchers investigate what they gained.


In a lineup of primates, humans are easy to spot. We’re the


naked ones.


While all our living evolutionary cousins sport fur coats, Homo


sapiens alone are naturally nude, aside from diminutive body hairs


and dense tufts over our heads, underarms and genitals.


This has vexed scientists since Charles Darwin. In his 1871 The


Descent of Man, Darwin asserted that fur loss is “an inconvenience


and probably an injury to man.” Dismissing the possibility that


nakedness evolved via natural selection — as a trait that improved


survival — he attributed it to sexual selection — a trait fancied


by mates. By this view, ancestors with less body hair were more


attractive and reproductively fruitful.


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ORIGIN STORY

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